An electrochemical biosensor based on DNA tetrahedron nanoprobe for sensitive and selective detection of doxorubicin

Bioelectrochemistry. 2024 Jan 23;157:108652. doi: 10.1016/j.bioelechem.2024.108652. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTDoxorubicin (DOX) is a clinical chemotherapeutic drug and patients usually suffer from dose-dependent cytotoxic and side effects during chemotherapy process with DOX. Therefore, developing a reliable strategy for DOX analysis in biological samples for dosage guidance during chemotherapy process is of great significance. Herein, a sensitive and selective electrochemical biosensor for DOX detection was designed based on gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) and DNA tetrahedron (TDN) nanoprobe bifunctional glassy carbon electrode that could detect DOX in human serum and cell lysate samples. AuNPs not only could enhance electron transfer efficiency and detection sensitivity, but also could improve the biocompatibility of electrode. TDN nanoprobes were employed as specific DOX bind sites that could bind abundant DOX through intercalative characteristics to contribute to sensitive and selective detection. Under the optimal conditions, the proposed TDN nanoprobes-based DOX biosensor exhibited a wide linear range that ranged from 1.0 nM to 50 μM and a low detection limit that was 0.3 nM. Moreover, the proposed DOX biosensor displayed nice selectivity, reproducibility and stability, and was successfully applied for DOX detection in human serum and cell lysate samples. These promising results maybe pave a way for DOX dosage guidance and therapeutic efficacy optimization in clinic.PMI...
Source: Bioelectrochemistry - Category: Biochemistry Authors: Source Type: research